# gcc(1) completion
#
# The only unusual feature is that we don't parse "gcc --help -v" output
# directly, because that would include the options of all the other backend
# tools (linker, assembler, preprocessor, etc) without any indication that
# you cannot feed such options to the gcc driver directly.  (For example, the
# linker takes a -z option, but you must type -Wl,-z for gcc.)  Instead, we
# ask the driver ("g++") for the name of the compiler ("cc1"), and parse the
# --help output of the compiler.

have gcc &&
_gcc()
{
    local cur cc backend

    COMPREPLY=()
    cur=`_get_cword`

    _expand || return 0

    case "$1" in
        gcj)
            backend=jc1
            ;;
        gpc)
            backend=gpc1
            ;;
        *77)
            backend=f771
            ;;
        *)
            backend=cc1 # (near-)universal backend
            ;;
    esac

    if [[ "$cur" == -* ]]; then
        cc=$( $1 -print-prog-name=$backend )
        # sink stderr:
        # for C/C++/ObjectiveC it's useless
        # for FORTRAN/Java it's an error
        COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -W "$( $cc --help 2>/dev/null | \
           tr '\t' ' ' | \
           sed -e '/^  *-/!d' -e 's/ *-\([^ ]*\).*/-\1/' | \
           sort -u )" -- "$cur" ) )
    else
        _filedir
    fi
} &&
complete $filenames -F _gcc gcc g++ c++ g77 gcj gpc
[ $USERLAND = GNU -o $UNAME = Cygwin ] && \
[ -n "${have:-}" ] && complete $filenames -F _gcc cc

# Local variables:
# mode: shell-script
# sh-basic-offset: 4
# sh-indent-comment: t
# indent-tabs-mode: nil
# End:
# ex: ts=4 sw=4 et filetype=sh
